Can This Woman Save The Planet?

Can This Woman Stop Climate Change In Its Tracks?

Christiana Figueres is the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Here's something that will make you think twice about complaining about your post-holiday workload: Christiana Figueres is spending this week on an assignment that could actually alter the future of the Earth.

Figueres is the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. In other words, she's the head U.N. negotiator as world leaders gather in Paris to try to hammer out an agreement that could save the planet.

"Never before has a responsibility so great been in the hands of so few," she told delegates as the conference began, according to the BBC. "The world is looking to you. The world is counting on you."

#COP21 Largest gathering of Heads of State ever under one roof in one day. And who says climate is not on the political agenda?

But Figueres has no shortage of the experience needed to help make the agreement happen. The 59-year-old diplomat and mother of two is no stranger to the world of high-stakes international politics. Her father and brother both served as president of her native Costa Rica. Her mother was a legislator and an ambassador.

Figueres' answer to why the world should care about climate change, for example, isn't lacking in the zeal department.

"Because they need to care about the quality of their life. Because they need to care about the quality of their children's. Because they need to care about justice in the world. Because they need to understand that we cannot eat today at the cost of what other people are going to eat tomorrow," she said in one video interview released by an arm of the U.N. "It is simple as that. It is a question of being human and having a moral compass that fortunately is also accompanied by an economic and a political benefit. But, first of all, we need to be guided by a moral compass."

With the future of the Earth on the line, the key question in the coming days is whether that moral compass — and Figueres' expertise — will guide leaders to an agreement that will help preserve the environment for generations to come.